4.7 Article

Evolution of hepatitis B virus sequence from a liver transplant recipient with rapid breakthrough despite hepatitis B immune globulin prophylaxis and lamivudine therapy

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL VIROLOGY
Volume 71, Issue 3, Pages 367-375

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jmv.10503

Keywords

HBV mutant; lamivudine; HBIG; liver transplantation

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Recurrent hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection after liver transplantation can be prevented by prophylactic hepatitis B immune globulin (HBIG) and lamivudine therapy. However, reinfection may still occur due to the emergence of immune escape mutants and mutants of the YMDD motif. The full spectrum of mutations within the HBV genome during recurrent HBV infection remains to be documented. In this study, serial HBV isolates were characterized from a patient with lamivudine resistance prior to liver transplantation who developed recurrent HBV infection within 2 months of transplantation despite a high dose of HBIG and lamivudine therapy. Sequence analysis of full-length viral genome before transplantation revealed many point mutations as compared with a wild-type genotype C sequence, including the T1753G/A1762T/G1764A triple mutation in the basal core promoter and the G1896A nonsense mutation in the precore region. After transplantation and therapy, several point mutations in the HBV genome emerged or became dominant. These mutations caused L4261/L526M/M5501 triple mutation (equivalent to L4281/L528M/M5521 in previous reports) in the polymerase, and D144E mutation in the a determinant of HBsAg. Transfection experiments revealed that the D144E mutation reduced HBsAg affinity to anti-HBs, confirming its active role for immune escape. Our study suggests that mutations in the HBsAg (D144E) and the polymerase (L4261/L526M/M5501) of HBV genome may be responsible for viral breakthrough despite HBIG prophylaxis and lamivudine therapy.

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